Here are some tips that might be able to help you in page design when working with things like google adwords.
Make your headline refer to the ad copy that drove the click. Match your language as exact as you can. (Close is good, exact is best.) This way you keep your visitor oriented and engaged. This is the most important part of your landing page.

Provide a clear call to action. Whether you use graphic buttons or hot-linked text (or both), tell your visitor what they need to do. Copy tests here will give you the biggest bang next to testing headlines.

Write in the second person – You and Your. No one cares about you, your company, or even your product or service except as to how it benefits him or her.

Write to deliver a clear, persuasive message, not to showcase your creativity. This is business not a creative writing contest.

You can write long copy as long as it’s tight. Rule of thumb: Think longer copy when you’re looking to close a sale. Think shorter copy for something that doesn’t necessarily require a cash commitment..

Be crystal clear in your goals. Keep your body copy on point as a logical progression from your headline and offer. Every digression is a conversion lost.

Keep your most important points at the beginning of paragraphs.
Most visitors are skimming and skipping through your copy.

People read beginnings and ends before they read middles. Make sure you keep your most critical, persuasive arguments in these positions.

Make your first paragraph short, no more than 1-2 lines (lines not sentences.) Vary your paragraph line length from here. It breaks things up makes it easier to read your copy. And no paragraph should be more than 4-5 lines long.

Write to the screen. Take a piece of paper wireframe where your text, buttons, and design elements will go. Consider how much of your content will be seen “above the fold” or at the first screen. If so, you’ll want to make sure you repeat essential calls to action.

Remove all extraneous matter from your landing page. This includes navigation bars, visual clutter, and links to other sections. You want the reader focused solely on your copy and the offer you’re making.

Don’t ask for what you don’t need.
Ask for only enough information to complete the sale or the desired action.

Assume nothing. Test everything.
These tips and techniques will get you started. Design elements are critical as well as video, audio, and other interactivity elements tomore deeply engage the reader and boost response.

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